Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Amy Butler
The first Space-Based Infrared System (Sbirs) geosynchronous (GEO) satellite is completing final integrated system testing in preparation for an April 2011 launch, U.S. Air Force officials say.

By Bradley Perrett
BEIJING — China will validate a range of technologies with its recently launched second lunar probe, including the landing of a camera on the surface of the Moon and control of a spacecraft by X-band communications.

Anantha Krishnan M.
PORT BLAIR, India — The Indian Air Force (IAF) base in Car Nicobar soon will have a full-fledged flight detachment, and a medium power radar (MPR) will be commissioned by 2012. “The MPR will further add teeth to the base,” Wing Cdr. M.S. Sridhar, officiating station commander, tells AVIATION WEEK. “We have a Rohini radar now with limited ground control interception. We will also have an air defense weapons squadron.”

Amy Butler
The U.S. Marine Corps plans to deploy its first Harvest Hawk armament kit for use on the KC-130J by the end of the month, according to Capt. Brian Block, a Corps spokesman. The Marines plan to procure nine of the palletized kits, each containing an AN/AAQ-30 targeting sight system mounted on the aft portion of the left external fuel tank. The kits also include Hellf ire missiles and the Special Operations Precision Guided Munition (Sopgm). Sopgms are Raytheon’s small Griffin and Northrop Grumman’s Viper Strike. Eventually, a 30-mm. cannon will be added.

Robert Wall
Despite the impending arrival next year of its Gripen fighters, Thailand is considering upgrading its existing fleet of F-16A/Bs. The Pentagon says talks are underway for a three-phase project to put 18 fighters through a mid-life upgrade (MLU) program. Each phase would include six aircraft. The $700 million deal would cover a range of subsystem improvements to the Block 15 aircraft, including the APG-68(V)9 radar, ALQ-213 electronic-warfare management system, ALE-47 countermeasures dispenser and PX-113 interrogator/transponder.

Graham Warwick
Flight tests of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter have been suspended following the discovery of issues with fuel-system software on all variants and with a door hinge on the short-takeoff-and-vertical-landing (Stovl) version. The Defense Department says flights are suspended temporarily pending modification of software that controls the engine’s three fuel boost pumps. Incorrect signal sequencing that could trigger a shut-down of all three pumps was discovered in the laboratory.

Staff
CLOSING DOWN: F-22 production has a little over a year to go. Parts for the 195th and final aircraft will begin arriving at the Marietta, Ga., assembly line in November, after which Lockheed Martin will begin mothballing the tooling as the last aircraft moves down the line toward its delivery in early 2012. Tooling will be stored in Conex containers, some environmentally controlled, at a location to be decided.

Michael Bruno
JOINT CIVICS: In congressional testimony Sept. 28, the No. 2 Pentagon official defended Defense Secretary Robert Gates’ recommendation to close U.S. Joint Forces Command, as well as several other recently announced reforms. “This was not a business case analysis, as some have described it,” Deputy Defense Secretary William Lynn III said. “This was a military decision.” But Virginia Sen. James Webb (D), who with much of the Virginia delegation is fighting the closure, disagreed at a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing.

Michael Bruno
EFV EXTENSION: Sens. James Webb and Mark Warner are calling on Defense Secretary Robert Gates to allow the U.s. Marine Corps to complete testing of its embattled Expeditionary Fighting Vehicle before deciding on its future. “The results of this autumn’s testing should allow us to make a more informed assessment of the program’s ability to satisfy affordability and performance requirements,” the Virginia Democrats said in Sept. 27 letter to Gates. The program is expected to face an imminent make-or-break decision by Pentagon leadership (Aerospace DAILY, Sept. 28).

Staff
DAVID’S SLING: The U.S. and Israel are formalizing a commitment to continue work on the David’s Sling project, designed to field defenses against short-range missiles, rockets and cruise missiles. Senior officials from both countries signed an agreement for development of the system last week.

Staff
DATA DISCONNECT: Budget pressures may lead the U.S. Air Force to defer upgrading F-22s with the stealthy multifunction advanced data link (MADL) under development for the F-35. While Lockheed Martin has not been told to stop work on MADL under the Increment 3.2 upgrade planned for 2015, it is “leaning towards delaying implementation,” says George Schultz, F-22 program general manager. The directional MADL was chosen as the data link to tie together the USAF’s F-22, F-35 and B-2 anti-access force.

David A. Fulghum
The U.S. military and the defense industry are developing cyberweapons that can be tailored for specific targets, and they also are looking at how to put such weapons on aircraft for airborne electronic attack.

Staff
FOX FIRED UP: British Defense Secretary Liam Fox is warning Prime Minister David Cameron of dire consequences from potential defense cuts, especially with forces deployed in military operations. In a strongly worded letter, Fox also expresses concerns about the conduct of the Strategic Defense and Security Review, in which some have argued fiscal rather than strategic issues are getting undo attention. Fox warns of several specific cuts, including the potential elimination of the Nimrod MRA4 maritime patrol fleet.

Staff
To list an event, send information in calendar format to Donna Thomas at [email protected]. (Bold type indicates new calendar listing.) OCT. 4 - 8 — BCI Aerospace’s Aerospace Meetings. Guadalajara, Mexico. For more information call +33 (14) 186-4150 or go to http://www.bciaerospace.com OCT. 5 - 7 — Reed Exhibitions Aerospace and Aviation Group’s Helitech 2010, Airport Cascais, Estoril, Portugal. For more information call +44 (208) 271-2155 or go to http://www.helitechevents.com/portugal

By Irene Klotz
KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, Fla. — Space Florida, a state-backed economic development agency, has been awarded a $400,000 grant from the U.S. Commerce Department to help beef up the economies of Brevard County and nearby regions affected by the shutdown of the space shuttle program.

Graham Warwick
MARIETTA, Ga. — With a program to re-engine the C-5B airlifter meeting cost and performance targets, the U.S. Air Force and Lockheed Martin are again looking at the possibility of upgrading older C-5As. “It’s a good idea, but we are in a very fiscally constrained environment,” says Lt. Gen. Tom Owen, commander of Aerospace Systems Command and program executive officer for aircraft procurement and modernization.

Staff
ARIANE OVERRUN: European Space Agency launcher director Antonio Fabrizi says a review of the Ariane 5 ME, a planned midlife upgrade to the Ariane 5 ECA heavy launch vehicle, shows one of the main requirements — that the ME be no more costly than the ECA — may not be met. Engineers expect to know for sure by mid-October. The ME is now in detailed design and is to be proposed for full-scale development at the end of 2012.

Amy Butler
While the U.S. Marine Corps is sticking to its plans for declaring F-35 initial operational capability (IOC) in December 2012, the deputy commandant for aviation, Lt. Gen. George Trautman, says the service understands that slips in deliveries and flight testing could prompt a later in-service date.

Staff
WING WORK: The U.S. Navy’s decision to “terminate for convenience” L-3 Communications’ contract to manufacture new outer wings to extend the lives of P-3 Orions is good news for original manufacturer Lockheed Martin, which is restarting wing production at its Marietta, Ga., plant. The company is producing new outer wings, center-wing lower surfaces and horizontal stabilizers for Canada, Norway, Taiwan and the U.S. Customs and Border Patrol, to extend the lives of their P-3s by 15,000 hr. Lockheed also is producing new outer wings for U.S. Navy special-mission P-3s.

Staff
EARTH TWO: Astronomers studying the tiny fluctuations in stellar movements measured over 11 years have concluded a planet circling a star only 20 light-years from Earth may have a zone on its surface capable of supporting life. The planet, Gliese 581g, has an estimated gravity between 1.1 and 1.7 Earth gravity, and circles the star Gliese 581 every 36.6 days. Based on the radial velocity analysis, astronomers participating in the Lick-Carnegie Exoplanet Survey determined that there could be places on the surface where water would remain in its liquid state.

Michael Fabey
While the U.S. Army is basing long-term decisions regarding its Abrams and Bradley fleets in large part on what the service will decide to do with its Ground Combat Vehicle (GCV), the current funding freezes on Abrams and Bradley are based on more than just the GCV program hiatus, service officials say. The Abrams and Bradley fleets have their own issues, according to the Army.

Amy Butler
The U.S. Air Force has issued Boeing its first order on a nearly $12-billion contract for a wide variety of B-52 sustainment work. The massive indefinite delivery/indefinite quantity (ID/IQ) contract was awarded Sept. 29 and wraps several other agreements into one large umbrella deal. It covers eight years of work with a ceiling of $11.9 billion.

Staff
Nov. 30 - Dec. 1, 2010 Munich, Germany MRO ENGINES FORUM Gain cost-effective best practices and strategies for engine MRO planning, new technology implementation, navigating maintenance contracts, green processes and compliance issues. Register now - http://www.aviationweek.com/events/current/mroeng/index.htm

Staff
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